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Tuesday, February 4, 2003
What is the need for a Word Processor?
David Galbraith has some interesting questions:
I think the basic principle is well articulated. For example, I'd like to have a "writing area" (which could be Open Office Word) which can then interact with a publishing tool for writing to a blog. Today, I write in a text box which has little formatting capabilities and no spell checker. Componentising activities we do into modular apps is a good way to go. Its something we should explore in Emergic because we have no legacy to worry about.
Workplace Manifesto
Bruce Mau has a nice collection of idead [via Shrikant Patil]. The 3 that I liked:
Management
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Viagra
Web Services
NYT writes about Web Services:
Adds Dave Winer:
Enterprise Software
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I think 'device-antagonism' is one aspect that makes the Web services concept real potent. Not only can various applications talk to each other but various devices can too. Irrespective of the implementation (OS layer or Middleware layer), the two underlying tenets - ubiquitous access and integration - are powerful and relevant enough to propel web services forward. Excerpts from a Mckinsey primer on web-services: http://informist.net/excerpts.html Posted by Mayur
NYT's Aggresive Stance
Stories about the media in the media always make interesting reading, especially if it happens to be about one of your favourite media sources. Ever since I started buying the New York Times regularly during my Columbia Days, I have enjoyed reading the paper. I also subscribed some time ago to the International Herald Tribune (now owned entirely by NYT). The website is a must-read daily. I read recently (I think it was the WSJ) about the NYT planning half-screen-sized ads on their website like what we are used to seeing in magazines. This WSJ story has more:
Imagination
As we grow older, we seem to be lose our ability to Imagine. I remember as a child and teenager imaging about the world of the future. Computers. Space. Intelligent Buildings. Robots. I'd listen to programmes on BBC World Service like "Science in Action" and "Discovery" and dream about the future. Somewhere down the line, I've stopped doing it. I've become too caught up with the present and immediate future. Which is not right. I need to be thinking more of life and technology 5-10 years out, or even beyond. If I cannot the worlds of tomorrow, how will I work on creating those? I need to free myself up for a few days once in a while to reflect less on the present and more on the future, to get a sense of how all the things that are happening (and not happening) can make a difference. Perhaps, its the reading which has changed me. Now, more of my time is in shorter chunks which I spend reading more "microcontent". Its been quite some time since I read science fiction or magazines and sites other than the ones dealing with business, management and technology. The attention span has reduced, in keeping with the nature of what I am doing. I would not think twice about spending hours listening to radio or while away an afternoon reading a novel. I only managed to read "Lord of the Rings" (for the second time) a year ago because I was sick and in bed for 2 days. Life shouldn't be like this. Imagination is our most wonderful asset. Its a pity we make so little use of it. I need to rediscover some part of me that I left behind 20-25 years ago in one corner of this world, and use that as a springboard to let the mind roam ahead free and far away.
General
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Dear Rajesh, This really touches a chord. Sometimes the best way to be in touch with your inner child is to be with children. Rajesh, Imagination. This has been an importaat part of my life. My development as a human being is in part dueto my ability to think, imagine , to explore the unexplored, to think the unthinkable ....... But there has been one major difference which I have been seeing in myself in the last couple of years. The imagination of the past was unrestricted, was not having boundaries or following any paradigms. Whereas now the first thing which strikes me is How and Why?. Is it possible, what should I do for it? What arethe recsources, the economics etc. This is in a way I feel a devbelopment - progress but it also restricts my ability innovate. May be the best way to continue would be a balance between the too....may be.... Suhit. Posted by Suhit Anantula
TECH TALK: The Rs 5,000 PC Ecosystem: Schools
How can the Rs 5,000 PC (5KPC) make a difference in education? First, we’ll take a look at schools. In India, there are 1.2 million schools. Today, few of these schools have computer labs. The focus of the 5KPC should be to enable the creation of computer labs in every school in every emerging market. By teaching about computers from an early age, we are preparing the next generation from the IT-enabled era. In today’s times, it is not good enough to be just literate – one need to be computer-literate. Let us consider the economics. Consider a school with 1,000 children. The first objective should be to setup a computer lab with 10 computers. While the ratio of 1 computer for every 100 children, it is a start. What would it cost? 10 computers for Rs 5,000 apiece with a “thick” server for Rs 30,000 and software for Rs 20,000 make the base cost Rs 100,000. Other costs would be networking (Rs 10,000), a printer (Rs 5,000). The total costs would be Rs 115,000 (or about USD 2,300). Recurring costs would be for maintenance – Rs 1,000 per 5KPC and Rs 3,000 for the server and printer, making an aggregate of Rs 13,000 (USD 260). Taken over a 3-year period, the total costs are Rs 141,000. Take into account some financing costs, and we are probably looking at a 3-year total cost of ownership of about Rs 170,000 to Rs 180,000 (about USD 3,600), which works out to a per student per annum cost of Rs 60 (USD 1.20), or Rs 5 per month (10 cents). [As an exercise, let us compare this cost with that of new PCs and Microsoft software. The cheapest new PCs in India will cost about Rs 20,000 each, with maintenance costs of Rs 1,600 after the first year. Microsoft’s software (Windows and Office) is available for the education segment for Rs 2,500 per annum. Thus, the three-year cost of ownership for a 10-computer lab is Rs 232,000 for the hardware and Rs 75,000 for the software, for an aggregate of Rs 307,000 (USD 6,000). This compares with Rs 126,000 for the 5KPC solution. Thus, for every 2 schools equipped with new PCs and Microsoft software, one could provide the 5KPC solution in 5 schools.] For this investment in technology, a student will get about half-hour of shared computer usage per week. Here’s the calculation for that: a day has 10 periods of 30 minutes each, with 5 days a week. This makes for 25 hours of education a child gets per week. This is also the computer time available for use. Across 1,000 students, this works out to 40 students an hour on 10 computers. Or, put differently, two students per computer per half-hour. Over a year (9 months of education), the student will get about 18-20 hours of computer education. The above calculations do not take into account two other significant costs: the cost of the IT curriculum, and the salary for the teachers. Let us assume that the IT curriculum is available for Rs 100 per student per annum, including the cost of the text book. The IT curriculum would cover the basics of computing, logic, programming languages, the various applications, and so on. (On a separate note, I happened to see one of the text books being used in a school in India. I was shocked to find the concepts being taught at least 10-15 years old – the discussion in one of the chapters centred around IBM PC XTs and ATs! Obviously, a relook at the curriculum and standardisation will be needed.) The schools will also need two teachers, at Rs 3,500 per teacher per month. Over a year, the teach costs work out to Rs 84 per student per annum. Thus, the total cost for providing education in schools is as follows: Cost of technology: Rs 60 Tomorrow: Schools (continued) Related Entries: [All]
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